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A73373 Christs kingdome Described in seuen fruitfull sermons vpon the second Psalme. By Richard Web preacher of Gods word. The contents whereof follows after the epistles. Webb, Richard, preacher of God's word. 1611 (1611) STC 25150A; ESTC S123316 169,960 226

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people that are according to our prouerbe He is as bad as a Iew. Finally by the woeful plagues not to speake here any thing of the torments of hell which is the worst of all which God hath sent downe immediatly from heauen vpon some of them in particular as vpon Herod Pontius Pilate and others For Herod to passe ouer all the rest and to make him an instance for all was thus plagued First he had a most scorching burning feuer by which he was inflamed exceedingly as well in the inward parts as in the outward Secondly there was in him an insatiable desire of food which could not be abated or be remoned away by all the meate and drinke which he did ranonously deuoure in great abundance Thirdly he had the bloody flixe Fourthly he had the colicke Fiftly he had the goute in his seete Sixtly his priuy members did so swell and rot that wormes did breed in the same And lastly he was from the top of the head vnto the sole of the foote so corrupt rotten that there came such a stinke from him that no person could well endure it and so in this woefull manner he ended his life and gaue vp the ghost Hauing thus seene the truth of all matters and found euery thing agreeable to the words of the text let vs now descend vnto the doctrine Doct. which may be gathered out of the same In few words it is nothing else but this that though we haue many enimies and sore aduersaries as Dauid and Christ had yet they shall not preuaile against vs but we shall prenaile against them doe they what they can as Dauid and Christ did Israel in Aegypt was cruelly handled but yet the more the Aegyptians did vexe them the more they multiplied and grew as it is in Exod. 3.12 And when they had done all the spite that they could doe against them yet at the last they were deliuered out of their hands they themselues being oftentimes plagued by the Almighty for their sakes and in the end most fearefully drowned in the red sea as it is apparant in the 14. Chap. of the same booke Mention is made of a great battell that was fought betweene Christ and the diuell and their armies in the Reuelation Chap. 12.7 c. But if you marke the sequele thereof you shall finde that Christ and his side had the victory For as it is witnessed of the Dragon who is the diuell and his Angels who are his souldiers that they preuailed not neither was their place found any more in heauen in the 8. verse of that Chapter so it is recorded to the glory comfort of all those who take Christs part that they ouercame the diuell the accuser of Gods children by the bloud of the Lambe and the word of their testimony in the 11. vers thereof But to omit other testimonies examples whereof the holy Scripture is full and frequent in this case let the words of our Sauiour Christ suffice vs at this time He tels vs in Math. 16.18 that the gates of hell whereby is meant all the power and force thereof shall not ouercome his Church or be able to ouerthrow such as do depend vpon him by a true and iustifying faith And in the 7. Chapter of the same booke towards the latter end thereof he doth shew the stablenesse of those that doe belong to the Lord haue a care both to heare the word of God and also to do it by a notable comparison wherein he doth resemble them to an house that is built vpon a rocke which cannot be cast downe by any tempest of weather whatsoeuer but doth stand alwaies still and cannot fall A thing neuer to bee thought of enough it is so full of comfort and consolation vnto euery godly soule chiefly vnto him that is afflicted here in this world But what might the reason thereof be may a man say that thus the godly should alwaies preuaile and be neuer ouerthrowne by their enimies but ouercome them rather Experience doth teach vs that they are fewer in number then the wicked are that they are weaker for strength and power that they are more simple for wit and policy and that they are more carelesse for diligence and watchfulnes then their aduersaries be How comes it then to passe that they haue the vpper hand The Prophet Isay doth declare it vnto vs in the 8. Chapter of his Prophecy and the 10. verse thereof Reason It is in few words because the Lord is with for thē For first he is stronger then all beeing able to resist all power that is made against his to do whatsoeuer he will both in heauen earth Secondly he is wiser then all seeing how to preuent them in all their waies and how also to bring matters to passe for the good of his Thirdly he is diligenter then all to stand as it were vpon his watch and to take his aduantage when it is offered him For he that keepeth Israel doth neither slumber nor sleepe Psalme 121.4 Lastly he is happier then all to haue good successe in all his enterprises For he doth prosper still in all things which he doth take in hand and none can resist a thought of his yea the very word that goeth out of his mouth doth accomplish that which he will and prosper in the thing whereunto he doth send it Isay 55.11 In warre all these foure things are respected in a captaine that will still ouercome First that he be strong Secondly that he be wise Thirdly that he be diligent And lastly that he be fortunate For the victory goes not alwaies with the strong nor alwaies with the wise nor alwaies with the diligent nor alwaies with the fortunate but sometimes with the one of them and sometimes with the other But looke where all foure doe concurre together there is alwaies the victory And therefore seeing all of them are in God it is no maruell though those whose battels hee doth fight doe alwaies ouercome and get the victory Here I would gladly come to the vse of the doctrine Obiect but me thinks I heare a man obiecting against that which hath bene said saying that it is not true that Gods children do alwaies preuaile against their enimies but that their enimies oftentimes do preuaile against them For we see that they are murdered and put to death Mention is made thereof in the booke of the Reuelation and in other places of the holy Scripture besides And thousand examples euery where do demonstrate the same daily vnto vs. For we do behold stil with our owne eyes and heare with our owne eares that the godly haue the worst end of the staffe as it is in our adage and that the wicked do beare sway and dominion ouer them How then is it true which hath bene spoken that doe the vngodly what they can yet the righteous shall still preuaile against them as here Dauid and Christ did The answere hereunto may easily
to account for such For our selues if we flie the corruption which is in the world through lust and giue all diligence thereunto ioyning moreouer vertue with our faith and with vertue knowledge and with knowledge temperance and with temperance patience and with patience godlinesse and with godlinesse brotherly kindnesse and with brotherly kindnesse loue we may assure our owne soules that we are the children of God and that he hath begotten vs vnto life eternall as Peter doth well declare in the first chapter of his second Epistle the 10. and 11. verses thereof For others we are to take them onely for the children of God who walke not according to the flesh but according to the Spirit and do become new creatures performing the same holy duties with vs whereof mention was made out of Peter last of all But if either we our selues or others faile herein leading wicked or loose liues we may tremble and feare but we must not challenge this prerogatiue vnto our selues to be called the sonnes of God nor giue it vnto others that are vnworthy of the same For as God is holy so are all those holy who are borne of him but as for the rest who are wicked and naught they belong to the Diuell who was a sinner from the beginning as Iohn doth teach vs in the place before alleaged Wherefore looke to your selues that you may be boly and righteous rising from the death of sinne vnto the life of righteousnesse that thereby you may be assured that God is your father and that he hath begotten you and beware also what title and appellation you giue vnto others that none may be wronged but euery one may haue that which doth of right belong vnto him Hauing thus spoken of the person of Christ or his sonne-ship now we are to speake of his office or princely kingdome wherein is set downe first the largenesse of it in the 8. verse then secondly the inuincible power of it in the 9. verse In handling these things I will be as briefe as I can In describing the largenesse of it there is included a duty which he must performe namely prayer then the fruit of it which is a great and large gift I will ioyne both these together for breuities sake Aske of me saith the text these are the words of God the Father inuiting Dauid or Christ to aske somewhat of him and enioyning them a certaine duty to performe if they would haue their kingdomes enlarged The words following containe the gift it selfe which God would bestow vpon them vpon their prayer and petition which they should make vnto him And I will giue thee the heathen for thine inheritance and the ends of the earth for thy possession A worthy reward of such a small duty as prayer is and a gift as we say most worthy of a king Surely as God is such is his gift For as he is great and mighty so is his gift here great and mighty It is obserued of Alexander the Great that he gaue to one Perillus for the marriage of his daughter fiftie talents and when Perillus told him that it was too much by halfe he answered him and sayd If halfe be enough for thee to take yet it is not enough for me to giue And in like manner when he had giuen vnto a poore Aegyptian a rich and populous citie and the Aegyptian stood all astonished at it supposing that he had mocked him Take quoth he to him that which I giue thee for if thou art Bias that demandest I am Alexander that giueth Thus he would giue gifts according to his owne ability and power So euen so doth the Lord our God deale here he doth bestow his gifts according to his owne ability and power Though halfe a kingdome be a great gift yet a whole kingdome is but a small gift with him Dauid and Christ must haue more of him then that For Dauid who was but the figure and type of Christ had of him not onely the whole kingdome of Israel and Iudah but all the heathen also that were round about him as the Ammonites Moabites Aramites Philistims Amalekites and diuerse others all which were in subiection and became tributaries to him as may be seene by the second booke of Samuel and namely by the 8. chapter thereof But as for Christ who was the body and truth he had spacious and large dominions of him indeed For he bestowed vpon him not onely one kingdome or two alone but all the kingdomes of the world from one end thereof vnto the other as the Apostle doth at large declare in his 1. chap. to the Ephe. in his 2. chap. to the Phil. Wherupon Christ himselfe spake vnto his Disciples saying All power is giuen vnto me in heauen earth Go therfore and teach all nations baptizing thē in the name of the Father the Son the holy Ghost teaching them to obserue all things whatsoeuer I haue commanded you as it is in Math 28.18.19.20 Here I might stand vpon the largenesse of Christs kingdome and gather some good obseruations out of the vniuersality thereof as to shew that wheresoeuer we liue or be yet we are vnder his dominion and are there to worship him and that if we do once offend him and play a treacherous part with him there is no place of safetie for vs to flie vnto to escape his power and hand as who doth reigne throughout all the world and not in some places alone as kings here vpon the earth do amongst whom malefactors yea most vile and notorious traytors do escape oftentimes death and other punishments according to their just deserts because they shift out of one mans kingdome into another But I will passe them ouer to your owne considerations come to more neceslary points for our learning A duty you see here is enioyned vpon Christ that he must pray to his Father for his kingdome and aske the same of him Againe a large promise is made vnto him that if he shall so do he shall haue an ample one indeed euen such an one as shall reach from one end of the world vnto the other Vpon both these brances a man might seuerally insist and stand but as I promised before I will conioyne them both together that of two works I may for shortnesse sake make but one Wherefore the doctrine which is to be collected out of them both together is this Doct. that men must pray to God for benefits and that by praying vnto him they shall obtaine them Aske saith our Sauiour Iesus Christ and it shall be giuen you seeke and ye shall find knocke and it shall be opened vnto you For whosoeuer asketh receiueth and he that seeketh findeth and to him that knocketh it shall be opened as it is in Math. 7.7.8 Likewise Iames doth say making instance in one particular which is wisedome If any of you lacke wisedome let him aske of God which giueth vnto all men liberally and reproacheth no man
doth conuerse and liue here in this pilgrimage before him But yet he is sayd rather to be in heauen then in the earth or in any other place many times in the word and that for two causes The one is because he is most glorious there and fullest of all honour and dignitie that being the throne of his Maiestie whereas the earth is but his footstoole Esay 66.1 The other is because there he doth manifest himselfe as most of all and in the greatest splendencie that may be so immediatly and not by meanes whether ordinary or extraordinary as hee doth here in this world as may be seene at large in the 21. Chapter of the Reuelations and other places of the Scripture besides But the chiefe end wherefore he is here sayd in our text which is in hand to be in heauen is to note the vnablenesse of his enimies to do him hurt or to preuaile against him Other ends there are of this saying elsewhere but this is the onely and principall end of it here and it is excellent for that purpose as was obserued before But to come to the other member as God is sayd to sit or dwell in heauen so he is sayd withall to laugh and to make a mocke or derision of them But he that dwelleth in heauen shall laugh the Lord shall haue them in derision Some reade this in the present tense saying But he that dwelleth in heauen doth laugh the Lord hath thē in derision or doth deride thē But we may take it as it is translated in the future tense for so it is in the Hebrew text A man may laugh at the first but weepe after a man may make a derision of his enimie at the beginning but come to ruine and destruction himselfe at the ending But it shall not be so with God he shall laugh both at the first and at the last and make a mocke of his aduersaries as well at the ending as at the beginning And therefore I thinke the holy Ghost did of purpose rather expresse his mind in the future tense then in the present tense not to deny a present act but to include the continuance of it as though God did not onely do it now but should do it still His meaning is that the Lord doth not feare the conspiracies and rebellion of his enimies which were mentioned in the three first verses of this Psalme that he makes no account or reckning of them but doth so lightly respect them as matters that he both will and can dash all to peeces when it pleaseth him For here in this verse and the next verse following is a figure called Anthropopatheia which is when things are spoken of God according to man and as his capacity is able to comprehend For we must not take the words literally but figuratiuely for to speake properly God doth not laugh nor make a derision of any onely man doth this but he doth it not And therefore I say the words are to be taken figuratiuely as they also are which are ascribed vnto wisedome in the latter end of the first Chapter of the Prouerbes when Salomon tels vs that she will laugh at the destruction of the wicked and mocke when their feare commeth If some foolish hare-braind youth of no strength or skill should send a challenge vnto some wise discreet captaine of great valour and experience in warfare the captaine would but laugh at him and make a game-stocke of him as knowing that he can do him no harme but will easily without any ado be ouerthrown by him So after the same maner that we might know that the Lord feares none of his enimies as such as can do him no hurt but that hee can easily at his pleasure bring all their deuices to nought ouercome them when he wil he is said here after the maner of men to laugh at them to haue them in derision God then laughes at his enemies not because he doth like of them or of their attempts against him as we doe oftentimes laugh at such things as please vs well but because hee cares not for them and doth see that all their plots are in vaine which are intended against him But why is this doubled may you say for what cause doth the Prophet tell vs of one thing thing twise First he saith that God shall laugh at them then after that he saith againe that he shall haue them in derision For seeing to laugh at one and to haue him in derision is all one and the one of them doth not differ from the other in sense and meaning the question may bee well moued why the Prophet should vse them both and not content himselfe with one of them alone The answere is this that he did it the better to note out the certainty and assurednesse of the thing whereof he doth speake For as Pharaohs dreames were doubled the one of the kine the other of the corne because the thing which he saw in his dreames was established by God and God did hasten to performe it as it is in Gen. 41.32 So the Prophet here doth double his words because the matter whereof he maketh mention is most certaine and sure and such as he would haue no man to doubt thereof And for this purpose you know doe we our selues oftentimes double our sayings and therefore it is as much in effect as if he had said But hee that dwelleth in the heauen shall laugh yea I say againe the Lord shall laugh and haue them in derision doubt not of it but beleeue it for it is a thing most certaine and true as heauen it selfe The consideration whereof should make vs bee afraid to doe any thing against the Lord. For of all things we do abhorre this most to be made a laughing stocke and a may-game to our aduersaries The Saints do complaine of it in the 44. psalme The Prophet Esay in the 8. chapter of his prophesie Dauid in the 22. psalme And Paul in the 4 chapter of his 1. epistle to the Corinthians And surely if this bee tart and irkesome vnto Gods owne children how shall the wicked bee able to beare it Yet here we see that God doth make a sport at all his aduersaries and doth laugh and deride at them Oh let the due regard of this phrase or manner of speech stay vs alwayes from all rebellion against him and cause vs to bee vpright in our wayes For shall we be a laughter and derision vnto the Almightie No no beware we of that But to leaue the seuerall members wheron many things might be obserued if need did so require to conioyne them together as they ought to be out of them we gather this doctrine Doct. That no power or deuice of man shall bee able to stand against the Lord but shal be ouerthrowne and be brought to nought For this is the end as you haue heard why these two things are reported of God the one of his
and that is included in these words This day haue I begotten thee that is this day or time wherein thou doest rise from the dead and returne from death vnto life haue I manifested and declared vnto the world all abroad that thou art my Sonne and that I haue begotten thee For so is this place expounded by Paul euen of the time of Christs resurrection as we may see in Acts 13.30.33 So that then there must be a distinction made betweene generation or begetting it selfe and the manifestation of it The generation or begetting it selfe was from all eternitie but the manifestation of it was in time and then chiefly when Christ rose from the dead For then was he mightily declared to be the Sonne of God as the Scripture doth teach vs. But here before we stand vpon the proofe it selfe a few things may be obserued touching the generation or Gods begetting of his Sonne For as we are to know that Christ is the Sonne of God so we are to vnderstand in some sort how the Father did beget him whose Sonne he is said to be The manner therefore of this generation in few words was this The Sonne was begotten of the substance of the Father not by any fluxe as when water is deriued from the head of the spring to the channell not by any decision as when a thing is cut in peeces nor by any propagation as when a graft is transplanted into a new stocke but by an vnspeakable communication of the whole essence or godhead from the Father to the Sonne in receiuing whereof the Sonne doth no more diminish the maiestie or godhead of the Father then the light of one candle doth the light of another from which it is taken The time of this generation hath neither beginning middle nor end and therefore it is eternall before all worlds Wisedome in the Prouerbes which with one consent of all Diuines is said to be Christ affirmeth that she was before the world was created that is from eternitie For before the world was made there was nothing but eternity Prou. 8.24 Here are many things to be wondred at in this generation of the Sonne and we must be warned not to conceiue it in any carnall or humane manner For there is a great difference betweene it and those generations which are found here in this world amongst vs that are men For first in our generations the father is in time before his son and the son is after his father but in this generation God the Father and the Sonne are coeternall and not one before or after the other for time Secondly in our generations the father is forth of the sonne and the sonne forth of the father so that they are distant in place sometimes the one from the other many a mile but in this generation God the Father is in the Sonne and the Sonne is in the Father so that they are in place alwayes together Thirdly in our generations the sonne is from his father by propagation but in this generation the Son is from the Father by communication of substance and not by propagation Finally in our generations the father doth beget the sonne by communicating onely his seed vnto him but in this generation God the Father doth beget the Sonne by communicating his whole substance vnto him So that here is a fourefold difference to be found betwixt our carnall and this spirituall generation or begetting And therefore I beseech you do none of you conceiue of it after a grosse manner but pray you vnto God for spirituall eyes that you may behold it And if any of you cannot conceiue aright of it wonder at it as at a deepe mysterie but beware contemne it not as a thing either false or vnfruitfull And so I leaue it and come to the proofe it selfe That is taken you see from Christs resurrection from the dead All the miracles that Christ did frō time to time going stil beyond the reach and power of man did declare that he was the Sonne of God yet it hath pleased the holy Ghost to apply this chiefly vnto his resurrection as being a most notable argument to proue the same For being dead if he had not bene the Sonne of God indeed he had neuer risen againe but had perished in death And in that the Father raised him againe to life he gaue euident witnesse and testimonie that he was his owne naturall Sonne and that he had begotten him from all eternitie And therefore Paule doth say that he was mightily declared to be the Sonne of God by the resurrection from the dead in Rom. 1.4 So that those that doubt whether Christ be the Sonne of God or no they may be resolued if they will but throughly consider of his resurrection from the dead For thus they may reason with themselues No creature that is dead and buried can of himselfe rise againe from the graue and returne from death vnto life but he that doth this must needs be the Sonne of God But Christ Iesus was dead and buried yet he rose againe from the graue and returned from death vnto life Therefore Christ Iesus is no bare creature but he is a Creator and the Sonne of the liuing God Many things might be here obserued and stood vpon concerning this point but because they are common matters and are included in the Article of our faith touching the resurrection of Christ from the dead I will passe them ouer and referre them to your owne priuate meditations Onely noting here by the way that as God did manifest the generation of his naturall Sonne vnto the world and did make men see that he had begotten him euen by his miracles and chiefly by raising him from the dead so he doth continually manifest the generation of his adopted sons and make them knowne to themselues and vnto others by his holy working in them and chiefly by his raising of them vp from the death of sinne vnto the life of righteousnesse as we may plainly see by many places of the holy Scripture but most excellently by that which Iohn hath written in the third chapter of his first Epistle the 8.9 and 10. verses thereof For there he doth manifestly teach vs who they be that are borne of God and how they may be knowne from the children of the Diuell and that is by their liues and conuersations For as the one of them do commit sinne who are of the Diuell so the other of them do not sinne who are of God but they worke righteousnesse and become holy as God their Father is holy yea as he doth further say they cannot sinne because they are borne of God So that then they are not leud and licentious as others are but they are sanctified persons and such as do worke out their saluation with feare and trembling By this we may shortly learne two things the one is whether we our selues be the children of God or no the other is whom of others we are
after them for the saine sinne and offence of theirs Vpon the one of them because he spared his sonnes and did not punish them according to their deserts as the beginning of the first booke of Samuel doth shew And vpon the other of them because he spared Agag the Amalekite and did not kill him according to Gods commandement as it is in the 15. chapter of the same booke Here here beloued it may go neare vnto our hearts and cause vs to sigh and sob within our selues when we consider how blasphemy the contempt of the Word the breach of the Sabboth disobedience to gouernors adulterie drunkennesse and other grieuous offences which make the Sun as it were blush againe to behold them do go vncontrolled and vncorrected in our times and haue no seuere punishments inflicted vpon them for the restraint thereof as they do deserue We haue as good lawes as any nation in the world but they want execution which is the life of them and those that should looke most vnto them do neglect them commonly most and not onely breake them themselues but countenance others also that do it But let superiors remember what the Lord doth say by Ieremy the Prophet in chapter 48.10 Cursed be he that doth the worke of the Lordnegligently and cursed be he that keepeth backe his sword from bloud So that there must be no sparing of men vnder a curse and damnation when God will haue them killed And let them alwayes beare in their minds what God did say to Ahab the king in 1. Kings 20.42 saying Because thou hast let go out of thy hands a man whom I appointed to die thy life shall go for his life and thy people for his people So that to spare a malefactor from death is to bring death vnto themselues and to such as do belong vnto them Obiect Obiect But this is cruelty may some say to kill and to destroy Ans Answ No it is not cruelty but iustice and the fulfilling of Gods commandement He is not cruell said an ancient Father that killeth them which are cruell although he seeme so to them that suffer but who so striketh the euill for that they be euill meaning by lawfull authority he is the Minister of God Others say it is pitty that such a man should be put to death pointing at some proper and comely malefactor Indeed the diuell for to hinder iustice and to make his owne kingdome strong though he were a murderer himselfe frō the beginning yet will come in amongst vs sometimes like a meeke lambe to perswade vs to foolish pitty and compassion but know you this that we must not pitty where God himselfe doth not pitty nor spare through compassion those whom he doth condemne for that is to condemne him and to exalt our selues aboue him in mercy and goodnesse which is an horrible vile thing in his eyes who is all mercy goodnes it selfe Moses you know was the meekest man vpon the earth and he had a most pittifull heart being contented to be razed out of the booke of life for the good of others yet he caused to be slaine at one time three thousand persons for the golden calse which they had erected vp in his absence as it is in Exod. 32.27.28 And albeit Dauid and Salomon were very milde men and mercifull yet Ioab and Shemei must be slaine put to death by them as may be seene in the second chapter of the first booke of the Kings And as one doth well obserue of them either of them did sanctifie their hands by this seuerity in executing iustice belonging to them which otherwise they should haue defiled by vnlawfull lenity and sparing You know it is no fault in a Chirurgion to cut off a corrupt member for the sauing of the whole boby So in a Magistrate it is no cruelty but vertue to preferre the safety of many before a few Let not then a superstitious affectation of clemency or pitty make a more cruell gentlenesse with the perill and hurt of many For vnder the gouerment of the Emperour Nerua it was rightly said It is ill dwelling vnder a king or Magistrate where nothing is lawfull but it is far worse dwelling vnder one where all things are lawfull Lastly here we may be put in mind what we our selues ought to do and that is this we must neither spare sinnes in our selues nor in others but we must labour to bring all to repentance and amendment of life by inflicting deserued punishments vpon both First we must deale with our selues and after we haue sorrowed to repentance wee must take an holy reuenge vpon our selues as the Corinthians did 2. Cor. 7.2 in pinching our owne soules and bodies in those things wherein we passed our bounds before and in restraining our selues from some things which are most lawfull in themselues Then for others as we must not countenance any in their euil waies nor become aduocates vnto others for them so if power and authority do rest in our owne hands we must strike them and see them iustly punished for their offences Herein let gouernours of families looke to themselues as well as Constables other officers Beloued you must know that when enormities grieuous sins are committed in your Parishes or in your houses you are not to winke at the same but according to your places you are to see the same iustly punished O remēber the reasons that were alleadged before to awaken you vp to this duty and let them sinke deepely into your hearts to bring forth a notable effect with them within you Haue a care I beseech you of the offenders that they may be reclaimed haue a care of others that they may not be corrupted haue a care of the whole land that that may not be plagued and haue a care lastly of your owne persons that they may not be destroyed Let none of these euils fall out through your defaults for want of punishing such as doe offend And herein you must spare none Thine eye saith the Lord in Deut. 19.21 shall haue no compassion but life for life c. And in the 13. chapter of the same booke the sixth verse and so forward he doth declare that though they be most deare and neare vnto vs as our owne children brothers wiues and friends that are to vs as our owne soules that do offend and go about to draw our heartes away from the true God yet they must not be spared but be stoned to death and that our owne hands must be first vnto it and therefore deale vnpartially with all fauour none before others as the world doth but deale with all according to their waies The end of the fifth Sermon THE SIXTH SERMON vpon the second Psalme PSAL. 2. VER 10. Be wise now therefore ye Kings be learned yee Iudges of the earth HItherto from the beginning of the Psalme to this place all things haue passed along by way of doctrine in a certaine continued narration